Battalion COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1962 Number 135 adets Launch Grid Drills Saturday siii* RESULT OF LABOR DAY CARELESSNESS ... thirty Texans due to die this weekend ■30 DEATHS FORECAST [ State-Wide Traffic Safety Drive Ready For Weekend Special to the Battalion AUSTIN—Governor Price Dan iel has announced the opening- of the annual Statewide Labor Day traffic safety campaign, and said the official Texas Department of Public Safety estimate of 30 traf fic deaths during the three-day llaboi- Day weekend “shows we jnjust stage one of our most stren uous campaigns to get the cooper- pion of Texas motorists in driv ing safely, legally and soberly.” igThe governor said the “sum mertime death record underlines the urgency of the effort. When Jime set a new all-time death rec ord for that month in our state, en the first three days of that lonth took 54 lives in 35 fatal crashes, when we hear about 20 plrsons being killed in three Satashes in six days in West Texas, it is tragically plain that we need to step up every effort.” |: Texas newspapers, radio and stations, through the Texas Press Association, Texas Daily Newspaper Association and Texas Association of Broadcasters, will again assist the governor’s High way Safety Commission, state agencies and local traffic safety councils throughout the state in organizing the campaign. Radio broadcasters have offi cially adopted the “Drive Lighted and Live” campaign as one of their annual public service pro grams. Radio stations through out the state will invite all drivers to drive with headlights burning during the daytime as a signal that they are driving safely and legally. In past campaigns, Texas mo torists have responded so well to this idea and practice that, in nu merous metropolitan and other traffic-crowded areas, there was not a single serious crash nor a ti-affic death. “This is a simple suggestion,” Daniel said, “that anyone can fol- our Architecture Appointments Made [Appointment of four men to the I) vision of Architecture has been jbinounced by Theio Holleman, head Ff the division. , A native of Cuba, Guillermo Vi- laud, will join the architecture ■culty as an assistant professor, le is coming here from the North larolina Highway Commission, laleigh, N. C., where he also Jiught at North Carolina State Jollege. jVidaud is a graduate of the Ha- kna University School of Archi- A&M Consolidated Teacher Accepts Navasota Position J. D. Chaney, 37, formerly busi ness manager at A&M Consoli dated, has been named principal f Navasota High School. I Chaney, who has been at Con- blidated since 1954, will assume Jis new position when classes open in Navasota Sept. 5. He plans to pove his family during this week. I The new Navasota principal tolds two degrees from A&M—a helors and masters in indus- ial education. He studied this mmer for his doctorate. At Navasota, Chaney will deal My vrith his principal duties. ile at Consolidated he served s business manager, directed the intenance and janitorial force, ndled the receiving and distri- lution of textbooks, directed cen- ras drives, headed the civil de- l .fe program and served as pur sing agent and transportation Mmager, tecture. From 1953 to 1959 he was in private practice, specializing in private homes and apartment buildings. He was a professor of architecture at Havana Univer sity before coming to the United States in 1961. Weldon C. Steward, a native of Pampa, Tex., is returning from New York to join the architecture faculty as an assistant professor. A 1957 graduate of A&M, Stew ard earned his Master of Archi tecture degree at Columbia Uni versity in 1961, concentrating in architectural design and research. He Is Resigning from the firm of Perkins and Will in White Plains, N.Y., to accept the appoint ment. The two instructors named to the faculty are Steve M. Vaught of Port Arthur and David G. Woodcock of Manchester, England. Vaught, who first earned a busi ness administration degree here in 1952, returned after five years of Air Force fighter-bomber pilot duty to earn his Bachelor of Arch itecture degree. He has been associated with architectural firms in Beaumont, Bryan and Houston. Woodcock is coming from the firm of Howard & Seddon in Man chester, England. A I960 archi tecture graduate of the University of Manchester, he also earned a certificate there in urban and sub urban planning. He has previously been a design critic and lecturer at the Univer sity of Manchester, and has done considerable research in architec ture history and urban decay in industrial areas. low. In addition to reminding him self to drive safely and legally, its use reminds the other fellow, too.” Texas Junior Chambers of Com merce, as for the past three years, will also take their Labor Day safe-driving campaign out to the highways and the motorists. Lar ry Tate of Tyler, Jaycee state safety chairman, has advised the governor that the Jaycees “are shooting for a new, all-time record with our highway rest-stops and distribution of safety literature to motorists on the highways.” Working through state execu tive vice president Bill Davis at Grand Prairie,' some 3,000 Jaycees in 165 Texas clubs are planning to devote 30,000 man-hours to the Labor Day program, to man 150 rest-stops along the highways where motorists can receive 60,000 free cups of coffee and soft drinks and 300,000 pieces of safety litera ture. They expect to erect 1,200 safety signs on private property along the highways. .Why all this effort? Tate told Daniel: “Maybe we can save an other 10 lives with our gentle re minders and friendly approach.” The Texas Council of Safety Supervisors, composed of safety directors of the Texas trucking industry, will again put its “Holi day Road Patrol” on various main- traveled highways to help travel ers in trouble. These units will bear identifying signs, and will be equipped with extra oil, gas, wa ter and communications facilities. They will do no law enforcement work, but will report accidents if necessary and aid stranded motor ists. Club Opens Mem bersh ip Drive Here Brazos County’s A&M Club has kicked off its 1962-63 mem bership drive with a goal of 600 members from the 1,287 former students in the county. Membership committee chair man P. L. (Pinky) Downs has announced that $4 dues will be collected any time between Sept. 1 and Aug. 31, 1963, for new members. Downs explained that most of the funds will go to the Wallace Kimbrough Memorial Scholar ship Fund, which supplies schol arships for three Brazos County students. Other membership committee members are J. H. Quisenberry, ’31; B. H. Dewey Jr., ’38; Carl Birdwell and Bob Boriskie. ’55. Directors for the coming year will be H. B. Adams, ’45; John Box, ’42; and H. L. Cashion, ’53. Opening Nears Plans are fast nearing 1 completion for the 86th opening of A&M’s doors Sept. 12 to new and returning students. Freshmen will arrive in only two weeks and will begin registration Sept. 13. This will be proceeded by two days of orientation and instruction during ‘New Student Week.’ Returning students begin registering Sept. 14”, with classes to begin the following Monday, Sept. 17. Other prominent dates on the calendar for the first semester include: Sept. 22—Last day for enrolling, or adding new courses. Sept. 26—Last day for dropping courses with no grade. Nov. 12—Mid-semester grade reports due. Nov. 22-25—Thanksgiving holidays. Dec. 20—Beginning of Christmas recess. Jan. 19—Commencement. Jan. 21—Semester exams begin. Jan. 26—Fall semester ends. Prog ram Graduate Enjoys Prosperity Greater than expected enroll ment marks the Doctor of Educa tion in industrial education pro gram at A&M. The program next month enters its second full aca demic year and is the only one of its type in the Southwest. Fewer than 12 colleges and universities throughout the nation offer the degree plan. ‘ “We already have as many stu dents as we anticipated we would have after four years,” Dr. Chris H. Groneman, head of the depart ment, said. Fourteen full-time students are expected in residence this fall, as compared with four students a year ago. Forty-two students have registered for the degree program and are carrying either less than a full schedule or attended classes during the summer sessions. Principal purpose of the new program is to develop college teachers of industrial education. The undergraduate program pre pares industrial arts teachers for high school shops, drafting and for certain types of technical sales and industrial production and safety careers. A&M has offered a master’s de gree with a major in industrial education since 1930. More than 200 graduates have completed work on this degree, and the ma jority serve in the field of edu cation, Groneman said. The new doctoral program has attracted widespread atten tion. Professional magazines have helped boost enrollment. State Seminar Will Include A&M, Texas A&M, along with the Univer sity of Texas, will have parts on a program Sept. 8 in El Campo to help community leaders of Tex as’ smaller cities in industrial and community development. The occasion will be the “Pro gram of Progress” seminars held in conjunction with “Operation Hometown,” the day Texas’ state government moves to El Campo as acting lieutenant governor Culp Krueger notes his “governor for a day” observance. Representatives of the Schools of Agriculture and Engineering at A&M will talk on their specialties at the seminars, with the Bureau of Economic Research also partici pating. The university will be repre sented by members of its School of Architecture. Four basic approaches to piob- lems of smaller cities will be made in the seminars, scheduled in El Campo’s Floyd’s Theatre. Each approach will be a seminar. The first seminar topic will be “Effect on Small Towns of the Planning, Construction and Main tenance of Major and Minor High ways,” to be presented by the Tex as Highway Department. The department has received 120 inquiries from persons in 25 states and two foreign nations. Already there is considerable demand for graduates of this pro gram, although it will be a year before the first doctorate is con ferred. Thirty colleges and uni versities in as many states have inquired about hiring a total of 47 gtdvanced students, “One student was offered a po sition beginning in September at an out-of-state college, but said he wanted to remain here to complete his degree in August, 1963. The student has been tentatively em ployed by that college effective in September, 1963,” Groneman said. Additional interest stems from the National Defense Education Act which offers fellowships for top students to study toward the doctorate in various fields includ ing industrial education. Three men will begin studies here under this program in September. Land Grant Fete Tickets Available College officials Thursday urged the immediate purchase of tickets for the USDA-Land Grant College Centennial Luncheon in Sbisa Hall Sept. 6. The ducats, costing $3 each, are available in the offices of the pres ident, associate director of the Ex tension Service and deans. Luncheon speakers include Dr. W. E. Morgan, president of Colo rado State, and Dr. T. C. Byerly of Washington, D.C., administrator of the Cooperative State Experi ment Station Service. 70 Expected For Workouts Approximately 70 young huskies will greet new Aggie Coach Hank Foldberg early Saturday morning as the curtain rises on another football season. Foldberg’s charges will open fall drills at 7 a. m. on the Kyle Field practice field a scant three weeks away from a date with the LSU Tigers in Baton Rouge, La. The Aggies will also workout Saturday afternoon, and will continue twice-a-day drills until the beginning of school Monday, Sept. 17. They meet LSU the following Saturday. The gridders have already arrived on campus and were guests Wednesday night at a smorgasbord in the Memorial Student Center. They will take physical examinations Fri day afternoon and be ready to hit the practice field early Saturday. Time for the afternoon workout Saturday and later ones has not been pet. Foldberg will probably leave the decision up to the team. Indications are that most of the Aggie efforts will be pointed to ward polishing and readying what Foldberg and the staff considers the team’s top 44 players. Spring drills were devoted primarily to finding these players, with the final polishing and preparation de layed until fall. Big senior Jerry Hopkins, the center from Mart, probably has the closing cinch that can be found to a starting job. Foldberg and his More Sports On Page 4 See Editorial On Page 2 assistants are high in praise for the veteran, who has also received high pre-season notice on mythical squads. Hopkins will lead a large group of fellow-seniors, all experienced from two years of considerable playing action. These include full back Sam Byer, halfback Lee Roy Caffey, and linemen Jim Harper, Jim Phillips, Bobby Hunington, Pat Latham, Keith Huggins and sevei’al others. Expected to see considerable ac tion in the backfield with Byer and Caffey are quarterbacks John Erickson, Jim Keller and Jimmy Willenborg, halfbacks Jim Linn- staedter, Ronnie Brice, George Har gett, Travis Reagan, Budgie Ford and Tommy Meeks, and fullback Jerry Rogers. In the line other top performers will probably be Melvin Simmons, Walter LaGrone, Ray Kubala, Yancy Bounds and Bobby 'Evans. Following the LSU opener the Cadets will have only two inter section opponents — Houston and Florida — before plunging' into conference play against the im proved Texas Tech Red Raiders. Home games will be against Texas Tech, Texas Christian and the University of Arkansas. Headed To Venus This is the Mariner 2 spacecraft that was hurled aloft from Cape Canaveral, Fla., on a 109-day flight toward the planet Venus. Initial stages of the flight have been termed successful and the spacecraft is expected to pass within 10,000 miles of the mysterious planet. (AP Wirephoto) Four Campus Short Courses Being Planned Four campus short courses are on the docket for September, the short course office announced Wed nesday. Planned are the Water for Texas Conference Sept. 6-7, the Com- merical Florists Conference Sept. 10-11, Landscape Design Seminar Sept. 24-25 and the Industrial De velopment Conference Sept. 27-28. The Water for Texas Conference is sponsored by the A&M College System, with 200 delegates expect ed for meetings in the Memorial Student Center. W. W. Meinke will serve as chairman. Thirty-five delegates are ex pected for the Commercial Florists meeting, sponsored by the florti- eulture section of the Department of Soil and Crop Sciences. Meetings will be held in the MSC, with A. F. DeWerth serving as chairman. The Division of Architecture will sponsor the Landscape Design Se minar, with Robert F. White acting as chairman. Seventy-five dele gates are expected for the MSC meetings. James R. Bradley will chair the Industrial Development Confer ence, sponsored by the research division of the Department of In dustrial Economics. Two hundred delegates are due, with meetings in the MSC. Registration for all four confer ences will be conducted on the first day in the MSC. Orange Man Given Award By Firemen Jack C. Methner of Orange has been cited for his “excellent teach ing service” by directors of the A&M Firemen’s Training School. Methner, a safety supervisor at DuPont in Orange for 21 years, has served for the last five years as the industrial fire protection chairman at the annual training school for firemen. The school, now 33 years old, is a week-long session held each sum mer, attracting more than 1,600 firemen from throughout the United States, Mexico, and Canada to the A&M campus. Members of the training school advisor board have px-esented Methner with a certificate com memorating his service to the school. Approximately 530 industrial safety representatives have partic ipated in the program since Meth ner has been chairman of the In dustrial Fire Protection Course. H. D. Smith, chief of the school, said practically all Texas towns and cities receive key rate credit for maintaining and supporting a fire department. “These communities may receive up to five per cent credit for send ing members of their department to the training school,” he added. “Instructors such as Methner have contributed toward untold amounts of savings for insurance policy holders and property own ers in Texas,” Smith said.